- Pali - Wikipedia
Pali was designated a classical language of India by the Government of India on 3 October 2024 [3][4] The word 'Pali' is used as a name for the language of the Theravada canon
- Pāli language | Theravada Buddhism, Pali Canon, India | Britannica
Pāli language, classical and liturgical language of the Theravāda Buddhist canon, a Middle Indo-Aryan language of north Indian origin On the whole, Pāli seems closely related to the Old Indo-Aryan Vedic and Sanskrit dialects but is apparently not directly descended from either of these
- Pāli language and alphabet - Omniglot
Pali is the classical language of Theravada Buddhism that was first used in Sri Lanka during the 1st century BC
- Pali Language: Origins, Structure Cultural Significance
Pali is an ancient language deeply connected to the roots of Buddhism It serves as the medium in which many of the earliest Buddhist scriptures were recorded, especially those preserved in the Theravāda tradition
- Pali language - Encyclopedia of Buddhism
Pali (Pāli) is the language of the Pali textual tradition, one of the two main text textual traditions of Buddhism The core texts of this tradition, the Pāli canon and its commentaries, are the central texts of the Theravāda tradition
- The Pāli Language: Level 1 @ The Open Buddhist University
What is the Pāli Language? The Pāli Language is the simplified form of Sanskrit that Theravāda Buddhism uses as its liturgical language It is the only Indic language to preserve a large corpus of Early Buddhist Texts, so studying Pāli (and the Suttas preserved in it) brings us as close as possible to how the historical Buddha taught
- Official site of the Pali Text Society
Pali is the language of the most complete collection of early Buddhist texts, the Pali canon or Tipitaka (‘three baskets’), which constitutes ‘the word of the Buddha’ as handed down by the tradition of Theravada Buddhism for over 2000 years
- Pāli
Version 3 contains 217 volumes of Pali Tipiṭaka, its Aṭṭhakathā, Tikā, Anu-tikā, and other Pāli texts The text is in Pāli and can be viewed in the following seven scripts: Devanagari, Roman, Burmese, Thai, Sinhalese, Cambodian, Mongolian
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